Let's say you're a typical low-paid working stiff. You've sailed
small boats all your life, you've saved a little money--you're finally ready for a real
cruising boat. You drop in on Tadd, your friendly neighborhood yacht broker, who is
more than happy to sell you that brand-new Trickledown 32 for only $90,000, plus a few
optional extras like anchors, sails, cushions, a compass, instruments--stuff like that;
say, $115,000 ready to sail.
"One hundred and fifteen thousand . . . dollars?"
"Not to worry," says Tadd. "Only 20% down and
10 years of easy payments and you're off into the sunset. Let's see, that's $23,000
down and, at 10% interest, only $1,215.79 per month--plus insurance of course. Send
me a postcard from Tahiti."
"How much per month? That's half my salary!
Don't you have anything in my price range?"
Tadd glances conspicuously at his Rolex, sighing, and points to a
characterless Clorox jug with a spindly mast--a hyperthyroid daysailer with bunks for the
seven dwarfs; NOT what you had in mind.
And then you see it, in the back of the yard, varnish hanging in
strips off weather-beaten trim, rigging frayed, sails ripped and stained, dank interior
with dangling wires and scurrying anonymous inhabitants. But underneath all the
squalor you see the lines of a real cruising boat--a sturdy hull with a sprightly sheer
from the pen of a Philip Rhodes or a Tom Gillmer--a fiberglass boat built back when
craftsmanship still meant something.
You remember when you bought your house--it looked a lot like this
boat, and you and your all-thumbs husband managed to breath life into it over
time, painting, papering, spackling--lots of spackling. This boat has possibilities.
"How much?" you ask.
"You're kidding, right?" say Tadd, flicking a bit of
cobweb from his spotless Breton Reds. "Take it for, say, $8,000?"
Sold.
Well, now you've got it home, but Bob and Norm aren't there every
weekend to help guide you through this restoration. Where to turn?
Turn to This Old Boat,
Don Casey, co-author of Sensible Cruising: The Thoreau Approach,
assumes you know nothing--not even how to use tools--and leads you methodically and
good-naturedly through every step of turning a cast-off fiberglass boat into a real
show-stopper, including the simplest and most compete explanation yet of sailmaking--the
sailor's darkest and most expensive art. Casey's step-by-step drawings guide you
through a simple project--laying up a fiberglass instrument case, for example--then show
you how to apply those skills to something more ambitious--like building a new hatch.
With this book and the best buyer's market in boating history, you
can send Tadd that postcard from Tahiti--and have money to spare.
About the Author
Don Casey credits the around-the-world voyage of Robin Lee Graham,
featured in National Geographic in the late sixties, with
opening his eyes to the world beyond the shoreline. After graduating from the
University of Texas he moved to south Florida, where he began to spend virtually all his
leisure time messing about in boats.
In 1983 he abandoned a career in banking to devote more time to
cruising and writing. His work combining these two passions soon began to appear in
many popular sailing and boating magazines. In 1986 he co-authored Sensible
Cruising: The Thoreau Approach, an immediate best-seller, and the book
responsible for pushing many would-be cruisers over the horizon.
Today Mr. Casey and his wife, Olga, often cruise aboard their own
Old Boat--a 22-year-old, much modified Allied Seawind. They've done all the work all
by themselves, with no adult supervision.
Can't afford that
brand-new boat?
Take advantage of the best buyer's market in boating history.
Turn a rundown production boat into a first-class yacht with This Old Boat.
Whether you are skilled or unskilled; whether you like sail or
powerboats, here is everything you need to:
- Find the right boat at the right price
- Map out a logical, affordable renovation plan
- Work with fiberglass--everything from minor cosmetics to major
structural repairs
- Renovate rigging, winches, engines, and other mechanical systems
- Work with wood, canvas, and plastic
- Change the interior from a cramped, dingy dormitory to a light,
spacious, livable home
- Repair and modernize the electrical, plumbing, and refrigeration
systems
- Make your own dodgers, sail covers, and SAILS--and much more
"Casey's intelligent, practical advice covers just about
everything, and his style is just what the doctor ordered for anyone daft enough to want
to fix up an old boat . . "--Southern Boating
"A great book for anyone on the water." -- Maine Coastal News